9/18/2006

Hidden Track











Hidden Track shows how contemporary visual culture is breaking out of the second dimension and printed form and entering into three-dimensional space, where it can be experienced. The book demonstrates how rooms are being occupied creatively and how items are being transformed. It presents the diverse exhibition possibilities that currently exist – a spectrum ranging from live painting to installations and 3D objects.
At the same time the book illustrates how urban and street art have recently broken even further out of the subculture and are being featured more often in galleries and museums worldwide. It analyses how these public art forms are being perceived in an international art context and investigates the fundamentally different forms of presentation that this new context demands.
Through abundant images and incisive text Hidden Track also introduces the artists and exhibition spaces that are taking current visual culture out of the underground to the level of high culture.

Genevieve Gauckler: Gas Book 15







Genevieve Gauckler is a Paris based artist who creates numerous lovable characters, blends them into everyday life scenes and turns the fantastical world into reality with her magical power. Her artwork series "Photostory" which captures the everyday scenery of Paris interwoven by her characters wandering about and creates world that is floating between the reality and the unreality. She has an experience of working at the British design company "Me Company". She is currently busy creating work for a Paris design collective "Pleix", working on various projects like website, illustration and animation. Imported from Japan.

9/15/2006

Winners of the Golden Bee 7




Moscow International Biennial of Graphic Design 2006

9/14/2006

Variations on a Theme: New York's High Priorities




















Every week, the editors of New York magazine identify five upcoming "can't miss" activities in the magazine's back-of-the-book listings section. And every week, New York's design director, Luke Hayman, and art director, Chris Dixon, select a designer to create "High Priority," a typographic illustration using these five selections. The rules are simple. The illustration is 4.4 inches high by 6.875 inches wide; it has to include the five events, the dates of the week, and the words "High Priority;" and it can only use two colors, red and black

Batory - Posters & Graphics Works








Catalogue Chaumont 2005





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